A Wise
Hope
Days
of Trouble Come.
(Ecclesiastes
12:1)
That’s how Solomon describes old age: “Days of trouble”.
That’s the way the wise talk. They describe life the way it is—the way they
find it. Yet, for wisdom to be wisdom, such observation must be told artfully—in
poetry and song and parable. Otherwise, it’s not wise. You can’t just blurt
things out.
Tradition has it that Solomon wrote Song of Songs in
his youth; and, Proverbs at the height of his kingly power; and, Ecclesiastes
as an old man reflecting back on life. We need all three books to grasp
something of Solomon’s wisdom. For now, let’s assume we know something of the
greatest love song ever sung; and, that we know something of Solomon’s courtly
wisdom—the way the King’s Kids behave and live life. That leaves us with
Ecclesiastes. Notice the artful way Solomon describes the reality of old age (Ecc
12):
Remember your Creator in
the days of your youth, before the days of trouble come, and the years draw
near when you say, “I have no pleasure in them”: …In the day when strong men are
bent down…
When the almond tree blossoms
And the grasshopper drags along,
And desire fails…
So,
remember your Creator before the
silver cord is snapped,
Or the golden bowl is broken,
Or the pitcher shattered at the fountain,
Or the wheel broken at the well.
It’s all imagery and poetry. Maybe that’s the best way
to say what’s so hard to say. We can’t pretend Gary’s last days were not
troubled. We lost him bit by bit. The
wheel to lower the bucket into the water, broke. Seems Scripture wants us to
spend time with Solomon before we get to Easter Morning. We can’t just leap
frog to Easter as if we were never troubled—as if there were no Cross. The
Apostle speaks of a wise hope (Ro 8):
We ourselves groan as we
wait for the redemption of our bodies. For we were saved in this hope, but hope
that is seen is not hope; for why does one still hope for what he sees? But if
we hope for what we do not see, we eagerly wait for it with perseverance. Likewise the Spirit also helps in our
weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the
Spirit makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
“Hope”… perhaps we were hoping for a bigger word than
“hope”. Any other word wouldn’t be truthful. It wouldn’t be wise. The “redemption
of our bodies” is a humble hope precisely because we can’t pull it off of
ourselves. It’s not our doing. It lies totally and absolutely in God’s hands.
It has to do with Jesus, young and vital, who died and rose again on our
account. So it is that “faith, hope and love abide.”